KEY POINTS
  • President Donald Trump is trying to end his migrant family separation policy, which could lead to the extended detention of families together.
  • A facility in Pennsylvania that currently keeps families together provides a view of what such detention could look like.
  • Lawyers and activists have alleged abuses at the center, which Berks County operates for the federal government.
  • Both the federal government and the county have defended the conditions at the facility.
Berks Family Residential Center 

The Trump administration's separation of migrant children from parents has sparked bipartisan backlash across the United States. But detaining families together could soon become another political flashpoint.

Political pressure forced President Donald Trump to sign an executive order to stop splitting up families last month. Now attention has turned to how the government will treat migrant families that it detains together while parents go through the U.S. legal process. One possible model sits more than 1,800 miles away from key points on the U.S.-Mexico border, tucked into rural southeastern Pennsylvania. It's a model that has raised controversies of its own.